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    • News: Global Fund

    The risk with the Global Fund's new TB strategy

    Groups advocating for TB elimination are hailing a new Global Fund recommended strategy that could raise coverage of the disease’s treatment. But the proposal can still go wrong, an expert tells Devex.

    By Jenny Lei Ravelo // 04 November 2013
    A boy receives medicine for tuberculosis provided by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and the United Nations Development Program in South Sudan. The funding institution proposed a new strategy that could raise coverage of the disease's treatment. Photo by: Brian Sokol / UNDP / CC BY-NC-ND

    Groups advocating for TB elimination are hailing a new Global Fund proposed strategy that could raise coverage of the disease’s treatment, but an expert warns it entails some risks.

    The strategy committee has recommended that countries with high TB and HIV co-infection applying for Global Fund support only put forward a single, joint proposal for both diseases. If implemented, a leading expert on the matter told Devex it will be a huge step forward, as it will allow a country to tackle both diseases on the same level, such as by having health information systems, supply chains and service delivery points that cater to both HIV and TB, and can lead to savings.

    A recent report noted that some 3 million people continue to miss being diagnosed with TB, and more than 300,000 of the 1.3 million that died from TB in 2012 were people living with HIV.

    But the same source, who requested to remain anonymous, said if the proposal is not properly implemented and not taken seriously, or some institutions and organizations resist it, there will be no progress in significantly scaling up TB and HIV services. This could lead to co-infected patients continuing to struggle to access care from two “vertical” structures, as it is in many situations currently.

    The strategy is expected to be part of the Global Fund’s new funding  model, which is scheduled for full implementation by March next year.

    Read more development aid news online, and subscribe to The Development Newswire to receive top international development headlines from the world’s leading donors, news sources and opinion leaders — emailed to you FREE every business day.

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    About the author

    • Jenny Lei Ravelo

      Jenny Lei Ravelo@JennyLeiRavelo

      Jenny Lei Ravelo is a Devex Senior Reporter based in Manila. She covers global health, with a particular focus on the World Health Organization, and other development and humanitarian aid trends in Asia Pacific. Prior to Devex, she wrote for ABS-CBN, one of the largest broadcasting networks in the Philippines, and was a copy editor for various international scientific journals. She received her journalism degree from the University of Santo Tomas.

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